Golden Games - England V Samoa 2014 Four Nations

When the Rugby League World Cup kicks off on Saturday (October 15) it will make those who care about the international game giddy with excitement. Not just because it has been delayed for a year but also because the international programme since the 2017 World Cup - even before Covid hit in early 2020 - has been almost as empty as a Ralph Rimmer apology. 

Australia and New Zealand refused to travel to England for the World Cup 12 months ago so Shaun Wane’s side had to content themselves with just the one engagement for 2021. That was a 30-10 win over France in Perpignan in October. A mixture of Covid and the relaunch of the Great Britain brand for a tour of New Zealand and Papua New Guinea in 2019 has meant that England have played only five matches since Josh Dugan tapped Kallum Watkins’ ankle and Wayne Bennett’s England fell six points short of becoming World Champions. Or since they became only the second team - after their own 1975 incarnation - to be nilled in a World Cup final. Funny thing, perspective.


Samoa have been similarly dormant since their 46-0 quarter-final defeat to Australia at the 2017 World Cup. They played just once in 2018 (a 38-22 defeat to Tonga) and twice in 2019 when they went down 44-6 to Fiji after beating Papua New Guinea 24-6. 


The inactivity is about to cease as England finally get to open their own long awaited tournament against the 2022 version of Samoa at Newcastle’s St James’ Park. Many observers of the game - including this one - are more than a tad concerned about the task awaiting the home side. Samoa have brought with them a squad that is brimming with top NRL talent. The likes of Brian To’o, Stephen Crichton, Jarome Luai, Junior Paulo, Joseph Suaali’i and Oregon Kaufusi would grace any team. And if Hamiso Tabuai-Fedow - newly signed by Kristian Woolf’s Redcliffe Dolphins - gets in open space you can probably forget about anyone in England’s controversial white and blue catching him. 


The threat from Samoa is real. If it transpires then it will not be the first time that they have given England all that they could handle over 80 minutes. We’re going back to the 2014 Four Nations to look at how a side featuring Joey Leilua, Mose Masoe, Ricky Leutele, Jesse Sene-Lefao, Josh McGuire and current Kiwi international Isaac Liu pushed England all the way in what was also a tournament opener. 


It was a round-robin format with each of the teams playing each other once in Australia and New Zealand before the top two met in the final. This was England’s first competitive game since losing an epic World Cup semi-final to New Zealand at Wembley a year earlier. Shaun Johnson broke English hearts that day, and coach Steve McNamara came into this one with a virtually new pack.   


Josh Hodgson had enjoyed a year with Hull KR that was good enough to see him recruited by Canberra Raiders. He replaced James Roby while Sam Burgess had agreed a switch to rugby union since the 2013 semi-final defeat. Brother George came into the starting line-up with his twin Tom on the bench. There was no Sean O’Loughlin so Joe Westerman started at 13. Castleford’s Daryl Clark had been named Man Of Steel after a superb year with the Tigers and he was handed an international debut off the bench.


The back division saw less change. Michael Shenton came in at centre for Leroy Cudjoe while Gareth Widdop’s halfback partner was not the now internationally retired Kevin Sinfield but former Saints lightning rod Matty Smith. These were strange times indeed. That left Sam Tomkins to continue at fullback with Ryan Hall and Josh Charnley on the wings with Watkins partnering Shenton in the centres. 


After a tight opening it was Clark who provided the first real telling contribution. He took advantage of some dozy defending at marker to scythe through from just inside the Samoan half. As he was brought to ground he found Tigers team-mate Shenton on his inside with a free run to the line. It was the former Saint’s third and final try in what would prove to be the last match of his 10-game international career. 


Shenton’s moment in the Brisbane sun had given England a lead which lasted only five minutes. Matt Parish’s side hit back when St George-Illawarra Dragons half Kyle Stanley found McGuire who handed on for Liu to crash over through the tackles of Tomkins and brother Joel. By this time Sam Tomkins was an NRL player too having swapped Wigan Warriors for their New Zealand namesakes at the end of the 2013 season. This was that bewildering era in history when Wigan players flitted between the DW Stadium and the NRL almost on a weekly basis. Even Joe Burgess - a man with frightening speed but also cursed with the turning circle of Royal Caribbean’s Symphony Of The Seas - managed to find employment at both South Sydney Rabbitohs and Sydney Roosters. 


A few minutes later England were behind. Stanley was involved again, finding Featherstone’s finest Leilua on the right to allow him to hand on to one-time Salford man Daniel Vidot to squeeze over in the right corner despite the attentions of Charnley. Vidot played only 10 games for Salford in 2016 having joined from Brisbane Broncos. Red Devils fans saw him cross the try line six times in that short spell so it is clear that he had some pedigree as a whitewash botherer. A year after his spell at Salford he retired from rugby league to pursue a career in professional wrestling. If only he’d had the foresight to stick around a year or two more he would have seen rugby league turn into a grapple fest in any case.


Back in Brisbane there were six minutes left until the break when England crossed for their second try to retake the lead. Chris Hill charged to within a metre of the line before the ball was spread right via Clark, Smith and Sam Tomkins who gave Watkins a walk-in. Watkins is again involved with England eight years on from this encounter. Only now it is as a veteran Salford back rower. Back on this day he was a 23 year-old centre, perhaps the most devastating in Super League and about to play his part in the Leeds Rhinos domestic treble of 2015. This was his ninth cap. If selected by Wane this weekend he will win his 26th, and his first since that fateful ankle tap. It has been quite the renaissance for the Manchester-born star. And quite the Salfordian flavour to this 2014 clash with Parrish having briefly coached the club and Vidot’s brief stint. 


A Widdop penalty stretched England’s lead to 14-10 before he played his part in pushing McNamara’s side even further in front. Five minutes into the second half he linked up with Smith to send Liam Farrell over on the left for England’s third try. Farrell is a key absentee for England’s class of 2022. He will miss out on the opportunity to play in his second World Cup with a knee injury. Here he was notching his first try for England in his third appearance as McNamara’s side opened up a 10-point advantage at 20-10.


Still the Samoan side would not go away. Only one of their 17 plied his trade in Super League and he was about to have a significant effect on proceedings. Peta Godinet played 45 games in two seasons with Wakefield Trinity, scoring 11 tries. He dragged Samoa back into the game when he went over from dummy half with 25 minutes remaining. He threw an outrageous dummy to his left, bamboozling Hill and the Tomkins’ brothers while opening up a huge gap to the line. 


Godinet wasn’t done there. On the hour he repeated the trick. This time on the other side of the field down the England left. He zipped past Farrell and Shenton who were slow to react at marker. Godinet then lowered his shoulder and crashed over despite the attempts of Sam Tomkins, Clark and Hall to stop him. The try was converted and Samoa led going into the game’s final quarter. If you were in any doubt about whether England could slip up against a Samoan team then don’t be. This was getting perilously close and this current Samoan squad looks much stronger on paper.


The shock of going behind at that stage possibly stirred England. They restored their lead just three minutes later. Smith’s bomb sailed high into the Queensland sky where Shenton was first to it. He couldn’t gather it but was fortunate enough to see his touch travel backwards into the waiting arms of Joel Tomkins who had a simple task. The less celebrated of the Tomkins boys to play rugby league for England, Joel would only do so twice more before defecting to the other code. This was his only try for England rugby league and it put McNamara’s team in a tenuous sort of control at 26-22.


The argument was effectively settled in very similar circumstances by a different Tomkins brother. Smith again launched one into the atmosphere were it was flapped at by Samoa’s Wests Tigers fullback Tim Simona. Fortunately for England the ball hit Sam Tomkins on the chest, allowing him to pick it up after it ran loose and stretch over to score as Stanley literally tried to pull his pants down. Just over 10 minutes remained as Widdop’s conversion offered breathing space at 32-22. 


Like the Monty Python knight - the one currently debasing himself on GB News - Samoa still wanted to fight. Two lucky tries by barmaid baiting Wigan siblings were a mere flesh wound. No sooner had Tomkins gone over than a cross-field kick was batted back by Frank Pritchard into the arms of Leutele. He found McGuire who spun a pass out to North Queensland Cowboys winger Antonio Winterstein to crash over in the left corner. 


England clung on for a 32-26 win but it was their only victory of an otherwise frustrating campaign. McNamara’s side suffered narrow defeats to both Australia and New Zealand who ultimately met in the final. England went down 16-12 to a Kangaroos side featuring Warrington ambassador Greg Inglis and a certain Sione Mata’utia. The Saints back rower was playing one of his three Tests for Australia on the wing before he eventually represented Samoa at the 2017 World Cup. 


Six days later New Zealand edged out England 16-14. Hall and Charnley scored tries in a losing cause as the Kiwis counted former Catalans Dragon Dean Whare, Hull KR talisman Shaun Kenny-Dowall and recent Wigan retiree Thomas Leuluai among their number.  The Kiwis went on to claim the title, edging out Australia 22-18 in the final at Wellington. Mata’utia crossed for his only Kangaroo try but scores from Johnson, Manu Vatuvei and Jason Nightingale ensured that Stephen Kearney’s side collected their second title in five editions of the Four Nations, also winning in 2010. 


Overall England and Samoa have met only three times competitively. The 2014 match-up was by far the closest so far, with England also winning 38-14 in 2006 and 30-10 at the 2017 World Cup. Something tells me this weekend’s encounter could yet be the most memorable and hard fought of all. Will there be a different outcome?


Relive the highlights of England’s last big clash with Samoa here








Wello’s In Tray

The relentless, trophy-laden Kristian Woolf era is at an end. He signed off with a third Super League Grand Final triumph in as many seasons. No coach has achieved that before in the professional era. He also added a Challenge Cup and a League Leaders Shield to his list of honours. Just how do you follow that?


The man charged with trying is already a St Helens and rugby league legend. Whether that is an advantage or a disadvantage depends on how you look at it. Paul Wellens - promoted from the assistant’s role having been part of the coaching set-up since his on-field retirement in 2015 - succeeds Woolf as Head Coach on an initial two-year deal. Stepping into the number two role vacated by Wellens will be former Catalans Dragons and current French national team Head Coach Laurent Frayssinous.  


Despite the incredible success enjoyed by Woolf and before him Justin Holbrook there is still plenty to occupy the mind of Saints’ new boss and legendary former fullback. Here’s a little look at what might be in Wellens’ in-tray for this off-season and beyond.


1A Left Winger 


Priority Number One is arguably to fill the Regan Grace-shaped hole on the left flank. The Welshman missed much of the season through injury and will not return having agreed to switch to rugby union and join Racing 92 in France. Jon Bennison, Will Hopoate, Josh Simm, Mark Percival and Ben Lane are among those who have filled in admirably for Grace, but more pace is needed in that three-quarter line. At a recent forum Woolf acknowledged that left wing is the one area that Saints have been actively looking to recruit for 2023. We should expect at least one new arrival.


But who? The fans’ choice would be Wakefield Trinity’s breakout star Lewis Murphy. Huddersfield Giants’ Innes Senior is a genuine flyer. What about a gamble on a Championship star in Tee Ritson? If money or contracts were no barrier then Super League’s best is Ash Handley. Or perhaps the prolific Fouad Yaha who will be known to Frayssinous among the French squad. If we’re playing Fantasy Football then how about Sydney Rabbitohs and PNG superstar Alex Johnstone or Canterbury Bulldogs’ flying fox Josh Addo-Carr? I’m sure Luke Thompson could have a word. Unlikely given the restrictions of the salary cap.


2. A Roby Succession Plan


Though most of what Woolf has passed down to Wellens places him at a great advantage, there are one or two little hospital passes in the mix. Not least of these is the thorn-riddled issue of how to solve a problem like a generational player. The task of replacing James Roby should really have been Woolf’s problem. Or at least he should have been the main strategist in working out just how you fill those boots. Roby was at pains to remind everyone at every opportunity that he was 99% certain to retire after the 2022 campaign. Which he was until he wasn’t. The skipper has committed instead to one more year. Barring a second and then a third deferral of his retirement Roby has therefore burdened Wellens with the task of finding a worthy successor. 


And the truth is that unlike last time we had a generational number nine retire, on this occasion we don’t have anyone who looks capable of stepping into the role. Perhaps we shouldn’t expect to either. Having two all-time greats follow on from each other in the same position is exceptionally rare. As rare as members of M People who endorse Liz Truss. Joey Lussick has been steady in relief of Roby this year without being spectacular, while Taylor Pemberton still has to fall into the unproven category with just two first team appearances to his name. Will Wellens give Pemberton more game time this year? Will he bring someone in? Don’t all shout ‘Not Brad Dwyer!’ at once.  Could Aaron Smith’s Saints career be resurrected after seemingly being surplus to Woolf’s requirements? There are options but none of them are James Roby.


3. Be Ruthless - Stop Renewing You Know Who?


Apart from that much needed winger there isn’t going to be much in the way of recruitment ahead of 2023. Woolf said this at that Q & A before his departure was announced and Wellens’ early utterances since taking over have seemed to double down on that position. What we have seen is a lot of existing players being retained throughout the last campaign. Jack Welsby, Matty Lees, Sione Mata’utia, Konrad Hurrell and Lewis Dodd have all had new or extended deals handed to them during the course of this year. And then there is Roby, who was always staying so long as he wanted to play on. 


Another with a new agreement in the pocket is the only man in the squad older than the captain, this column’s favourite punchbag Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook. He will be 37 before the 2023 season gets under way. Whether or not you thought the prop was a world-beater at 25 or 30 there are few players who spring to mind who have cut it in Super League at 37 or over. And they have tended to be RL legends like Steve Menzies, Jamie Peacock and Sean O’Loughlin. Putting aside my own bias can we really carry on handing out one year extensions to an average player way past his best just because he’s a good bloke to have around? It won’t be easy for Wellens as McCarthy-Scarsbrook is one of those whom he once played alongside, but he cannot let it go on beyond 2023. McCarthy-Scarsbrook may choose to retire but if not, a conversation needs to be had between friends.


4. Make It Fun


While Saints were conquering all before them under Woolf it was considered heresy to criticise his methods. Not that it stopped me. You can’t argue with his phenomenal winning record but it hasn’t always been fun. In mitigation this year he has been dealing with permanent injury and suspension problems. There was a noticeable shift towards a more conservative approach when Dodd was lost for the season in mid-April. Yet it has hardly been Harlem Globetrotters stuff at any point during Woolf’s reign. The emphasis has always been on defence first, then hammering the door down through the middle before you even think about playing with anything resembling panache. 


For some this does not matter. As long as there are trophies being lifted at the end of each year then the ends justify the means. My take is that - especially in a playoff system in which winning the league has never earned you more disrespect - there has to be more to the journey of a regular season. If all we are playing for is to get into the playoffs then what is there to get excited about during a routine 20-point home win over Leigh or Wakefield? Failure to make the playoffs for Saints would be an underachievement of Warringtonian proportions. It’s probably not going to happen. After all, it never has in 25 years of a post-season system. So we need something to make the months from February to September exciting again. We need to play with a swagger.


Happily it looks on the face of it as if Wellens agrees that this has been missing. He has spoken about the club’s traditions of open, flowing rugby. He has identified Frayssinous as someone who can help perk up an attack that is - unusually for a great Saints side - not its main strength. It is going to be fascinating to see what the Frenchman comes up with to shake things up with ball in hand. Having Dodd back will help but if we are going to play more expansively we need buy-in from the players. And arguably a faster back line. It won’t happen overnight but I’d settle for visible strides towards it.


5. Don’t be KC 


Like it or not we have to confront the loxodonta in the room. Long before Woolf left - when hypothetical conversations about his potential successor were being held in offices and bar rooms from Billinge to Clock Face - there was furious debate about whether we should appoint another relatively recently retired club legend as Head Coach. For some the trauma of the Keiron Cunningham years and the sadness around his eventual departure is still raw. They fear that if Wellens does not live up to expectations - and let’s face it those are pretty massive when you are going for five titles in a row - then his reputation will dip amongst the support.


One of the saddest things for me in recent years supporting Saints has been the decline of the esteem in which Cunningham is held. These same fans voted for him to be the subject of the statue outside the stadium. Now he’s rated a step or three behind the next great hooker who came along - the admittedly brilliant Roby. Either we have been incredibly lucky in producing number nines in this town in the last 30 years or else it doesn’t compute. It seems to me that a mixture of recency bias and a lingering resentment towards Cunningham for his Lama Tasis and his Atelea Veas is at play.


Of course, Wellens is not Cunningham. He is his own man who will no doubt implement his own ideas and philosophies. Seemingly he has already started that process. You are unlikely to see Saints props diving for the floor to get a quick play-the-ball under the former fullback’s tutelage. Yet as close as he was to the Cunningham situation Wellens will know the risks. If he has listened to the fan chatter or read it on social media he will know the threat to his legacy that is posed by failure. He must learn from his old coach and team-mate’s experience. Everything from tactics to communication with the fans is almost as important as results.


What do you think? What are the things that you would like to see Wello focus on? Or should he employ an ‘if it ain’t broke’ philosophy? 


Saints 19 Salford Red Devils 12 - Super League Semi-Final Review

As expected it was tight, but Saints eventually broke Salford Red Devils’ resolve to make it through to a record-extending 14th Super League Grand Final appearance with this 19-12 win on Saturday (September 17).

It means that the champions will get the chance to win an unprecedented fourth Super League title in a row. Standing in their way at Old Trafford next week will be Leeds Rhinos - themselves veterans of 10 previous Grand Finals. They also happen to be the only other side to have won three back-to-back Grand Finals since the inception of the event in 1998. Saints coach Kristian Woolf has a chance to become the only head coach to win three in a row having led the club to victory in 2020 and 2021. Leeds’ three successes between 2007-09 came under two different coaches in Tony Smith and Brian McClennan.


For Salford it is the end of the road. Yet they can be hugely proud of their efforts. Just like their 2019 vintage they have defied the expectations of the outsiders and maybe even their own. Just like three years ago they have fallen short against Saints. After a fairly dismal start to 2022 which saw them win just three of their first 11 matches the Red Devils have been transformed by coach Paul Rowley in the second half of the season. 


Whether the competition structure should enable a side starting so slowly to make it this far and potentially all the way to the title is a debate we will continue to have annually in September and October.  The argument will intensify in this little corner of the world should the Rhinos win in Manchester. But coming into this one there were few who would have disagreed with the notion that Salford were the form team in the top flight. My pre-game nerves and those of much of the Saints fan base were genuine and justified. 


A lot of those nerves stemmed from the continued struggle with injuries. The squad announcement on Thursday (September 15) did little to quell the anxiety. Treatment room staple Will Hopoate was not included, joining Alex Walmsley and long term absentees Lewis Dodd and Regan Grace on the sidelines. On the plus side Mark Percival and Sione Mata’utia returned. Come game day they formed an all new left edge in the three-quarters with Percival on the wing and Mata’utia at centre. Jon Bennison occupied the fullback role allowing Jack Welsby to join Jonny Lomax in the halves. Agnatius Passi started at prop for Walmsley.


Rowley’s side were closer to full strength but had to do without their most influential player. Arguably the most influential player in the league in 2022. Brodie Croft has been reviving his career with some outstanding performances in Super League this year after his rise to NRL stardom somehow hit the buffers. So much so that he is the newly crowned Steve Prescott Man Of Steel. Unfortunately for the Red Devils his brief loss of consciousness in last week’s playoff win at Huddersfield Giants cost him his place in this one due to concussion protocols.  Chris Atkin stepped into the halves alongside Marc Sneyd.


Less than two minutes in Salford lost another key piece of their puzzle. Andy Ackers is many people’s choice as England hooker for the forthcoming World Cup. There is logic in that with James Roby not budging from international retirement, Josh Hodgson injured and Micky McIlorum being…well…Micky McIlorum. Ackers’ exit from the action was swift as he got his head in entirely the wrong place in attempting to tackle Bennison. Ackers was sent for an HIA from which he was not able to return. Bennison was perhaps fortunate not to suffer similarly given the reckless nature of Elijah Taylor’s part in the incident. He charged in at Bennison foregoing any thought to using his arms to wrap up the Saints fullback. Referee Chris Kendall chose not to even penalise Taylor for his effort which - while not conclusively high - was completed with the shoulder for the most part. The rules and interpretations change often but I’m amost certain that shoulder charges are still illegal.


Saints dominated early in both territory and possession. Yet there were signs from pretty early on that their functional, frills-free attack wasn’t going to find it easy to smash down the Salford doors. Morgan Knowles came up with a fairly basic error 10 metres out from Welsby’s pass before Mata’utia suffered a similar fate albeit with the Red Devils defence in somewhat closer proximity as he attempted to shift the ball on to Percival.. 


It wasn’t until Woolf’s side got to the last play and their short kicking game that they carved out a genuine scoring chance. Lomax was the architect, sending a low kick through the defensive line and into the in-goal area for the chasers on the right edge to run on to.  First to it was Joe Batchelor, but when Kendall sent it up for review with an initial decision of no try the ruling was confirmed. The ball had just beaten Batchelor who could only catch up with it in time to ground it on the dead ball line. On the line is out. 


Events later in the contest would spark a debate about whether Batchelor’s efforts should have been rewarded with a penalty try. There was no discussion between Kendall and video referee James Child about a penalty try even though replays showed that Sneyd had pulled Batchelor’s arm back as he gave chase. Given how close the ex-York man got to grounding the ball there were many Saints fans making the case that he would have got to the ball well in time without the intervention of Sneyd. 


And he might. But could Child have been certain if it had been referred to him? Probably not to my mind. Batchelor did extremely well to get to it when he did. Without the benefit of hindsight I’m not sure you’d expect Batchelor to catch up with it at the time of the foul. The question is whether Child would have been able - in accordance with the law - to rule on it based on what I would suggest turned out to be an unlikely outcome. There should be a high bar for the awarding of a penalty try and this - along with the now notorious foul by Tommy Makinson on Tim Lafai which we will deal with later - is not it. It doesn’t help that most observers of a red vee persuasion have only raised it in response to the howls of derision from Red Devils fans over the Lafai incident. Then it just looks like whataboutery.


Happily, Batchelor didn’t have to wait long for a more favourable outcome. The methodology was pretty similar to the earlier near miss. Lomax again asked the question with a testing short kick which Batchelor was again first to respond to. It needed the approval of Child in the booth - and for whatever reason he took three or four looks at it - but Saints were up and running. Makinson landed his first goal of the day and Saints had a 6-0 lead which their dominance justified.  


They could have added to that lead a couple of minutes later. Again Lomax was at the centre of it, finding Hurrell in space down the right. The ex-Leeds man handed it on to Makinson who looked certain to get away and either score himself or send a return pass to Hurrell who had continued his run. Yet the Saints winger was denied by a desperate ankle tap by Joe Burgess. It wasn’t quite of the magnitude of Josh Dugan on Kallum Watkins in the 2017 World Cup final but it was a try saver which at that stage arguably kept Rowley’s side in the game. Not many teams recover from double digit deficits at the home of the Saints. And so it was to prove the case again here. For now it was a vital interjection by the former Wigan flyer. 


Yet not for very long. Only a couple of minutes later Lomax - turning in a stellar performance during which it seemed he was expected to do everything in this house as far as creativity in attack was concerned - provided Batchelor with his second. It seems strange to reflect that if a different referee (or the video referee had he been asked) had taken a different view of the earlier near miss then Batchelor could have had a hat-trick in the opening quarter of the game. 


He was able to take Lomax’s pass and spin over for his second try. His 12th of the season in all competitions and his first double in Saints colours. It extended the run of games in which the 27 year-old has crossed the whitewash to three having done so in defeat at Wigan as well as in the home win over Toulouse which rounded off the regular season. The extra two was a tough ask for Makinson from a wide position but he didn’t blink and Saints led 12-0. 


For all their dominance in that first 20 minutes Saints were still too reliant on Lomax, in particular his short kicking game. Perhaps that is understandable with only Lomax and Makinson playing in their correct positions in what would be considered Saints’ strongest back division if everyone was available. Yet it has also become part of their DNA under Woolf. Physically dominate through the forwards and then if the opposition stand up to it until late in the count look for Lomax - or sometimes Welsby - to create something at the back end of the set. Saints are literally grinding teams down at the moment. Some may be happy with it as long as the team wins. Others may feel it necessary in order to make sure that they do win. I don’t think anyone could argue that it’s nice to watch. If Woolf’s successor fails to emulate his results - and given Woolf’s incredible record there is a fair chance of a dip - I will miss the trophies and the glory. I won’t miss the tactics.


If Woolf had anything to do with the next major incident in the game then he can take that with him when he goes too. Having tackled Atkin Knowles’ inexplicably decided to grab hold of the Salford man’s arms as the pair tried to disentangle themselves from each other. The Saints man then proceeded to push Atkin’s arm up his back in the manner of Gripper Stebson trying to steal Roland Browning’s lunch money in Grange Hill. Perhaps I’m showing my age there. 


Either way it was inexplicable, inexcusable grubbery from Knowles. If his Wigan namesake Mr Smithies had done something like that we’d be calling for him to serve a significant stretch at His Majesty’s Pleasure. Woolf opined that he would be ‘flabbergasted’ if Knowles were to be banned for the incident. His gast was well and truly flabbered when the Match Review Panel handed out a two-game suspension.


That means that Knowles will now miss the Grand Final following an unsuccessful appeal which defined the disciplinary’s new buzzword ‘frivolous’. That’s a shame but to my mind Knowles only has himself to blame. What are you trying to achieve by pushing someone’s arm up their back other than to cause some damage? Or steal their lunch money. And as far as the decision to appeal is concerned is this really who we are? Can we not leave the shithousing and villainy to the other lot down the road who specialise in it? In supporting the innocence or diminishing the culpability of Knowles we are swiping the moral high ground from beneath our own feet. Frankly this is no way for the leading club in Super League to behave. 


Kendall wasn’t too enamoured with Knowles’ and promptly sent him to the sin-bin. It was the ex-Wales international’s third yellow card of the season. It also opened up a door for the Red Devils who gratefully passed through it in the very next set. Sneyd and Atkin shifted the ball right to Watkins before the former Rhino - a veteran of three Grand Final success and trying to get to a fourth - stepped out of the tackle of Welsby and had too much strength for Bennison as he dived over to put the visitors on the scoreboard. Sneyd’s conversion reduced the arrears to one converted try at 12-6.


The short kick to Batchelor’s side of the field was still proving profitable for Saints. If something is working then most would suggest you keep doing it. This time it was Welsby with the dab beyond the Salford try line where Batchelor just failed to ground the ball. Kendall was confident enough in his own judgement not to send it up for review and got it just about spot on. Batchelor did get a hand to the ball but bounced it on the ground rather than applying any downward pressure. A try then could have broken Salford’s resolve. They were hanging on by a combination of their own defensive desire and Saints’ lack of a cutting edge in attack.


And so to the other big disciplinary issue which has had rugby league fans - friend or foe - wagging their tongues in the aftermath of this clash. Sneyd flipped a ball to Atkin that might as well have had a big red cross painted on it like the flag of St George or the doors of the infected in plague-era London. It set Atkin up to be met with a juddering, bone-shaking, spirit-jarring bell ringer of a hit from Welsby. As big hits go it could not have been better timed. Welsby arrived at precisely the moment Atkin took possession of the ball which left the coast clear for him to tee off on the former Hull KR man. Atkin’s only aim was to avoid losing possession which to his credit he managed to do. 


Since the hit those of a non-Saints persuasion have been calling for Welsby to be suspended and so sit out the Grand Final along with Knowles. There seems to be a fair amount of outrage at the fact that the Match Review Panel did not agree. They did charge Welsby - probably due to the fact that there was contact between his shoulder and Atkin’s head as the Saints star wrapped his arms around in a front on position. But if there is such a thing as incidental contact then this was it.  


Apparently it was Welsby’s excellent disciplinary record - and not the fact that he made a very good tackle with some unfortunate accidental contact - which spared him from a suspension. He was found guilty of a Grade A offence but given no ban. All of which smells like a cop out from a body who didn’t want to ban a star player from a showpiece event if they can help it but didn’t want to be seen to be veering too far from their previous strict liability policy. It’s a compromise. Welsby avoids the ban he doesn’t really deserve but the MRP get to highlight the fact that they did notice the head contact and made a token gesture towards sanctioning it.  If he does it again he’ll get banned. And there’ll be outrage from people who either don’t understand or can’t accept the disciplinary process.


Though Salford had got back into it through Watkins’ try they continued to struggle in the face of some monstrous defence from Saints. There were plenty of times when Sneyd found himself kicking from in and around his own 20 metre line as the Red Devils continually struggled to make good metres. When they did get out the AJ Bell Stadium side fluffed their lines. Watkins broke the shackles briefly but his pass to a temporarily unguarded Ken Sio squirmed from the grasp of the league’s second top scorer and into touch. Rowley’s men were making few chances and spurning those that they had. A combination which - as a blueprint for beating the top side in the competition - had a demonstrable lack of potential. 


Saints were not exactly firing either. When Taylor foolishly stripped the ball from Hurrell’s grasp to concede a kickable penalty the champions opted to go for goal. An eight-point cushion at 14-6 seemed like a pretty handy advantage in what had hitherto been a clash not exactly over-flowing with try scoring opportunities. Makinson stepped up from 45 metres out but could not connect. The winger has kicked 71 of his 105 attempts at goal this season. That’s more successes than all but three others in Super League but more misses than anyone else in the competition. Much like Saints high error count - a league leading 306 - Makinson’s record is a consequence of having the goal-kicking responsibility for a team which regularly dominates opponents.


Errors further thwarted Saints as they looked for the score that would push them out of immediate striking distance. Roby was having a highly uncharacteristic struggle to hold on to the ball and distribute it with his usual faultless accuracy. Mata’utia was battling with the demands on his skill set which come from switching to the centres. So again it was left to Lomax to conjure up another opportunity - one which ultimately proved hugely influential mentally if not practically. 


His kick to the in-goal was taken dead by Burgess inside the final minute of the first half. From the resultant dropout Roby moved into his natural habitat of dummy half and was on target with the pass to Lomax this time. Setting himself 30 metres out the Saints half struck his drop-goal attempt well, arrowing it between the posts as time ran out.  Crucially, Salford were now 13-6 down and saddled with the psychological annoyance of knowing they needed to score twice to get back on terms or take the lead.   


If Lomax was the chief string-yanker for Saints then Sneyd filled the vacancy for Salford. Early in the second half his incredible 40/20 attempt fell just inches short of setting the Red Devils up with what probably would have been their best attacking position since Watkins’ try. It also served as a reminder that the Red Devils remained a threat as long as they had Sneyd to guide them around, especially in the absence of Croft. 


Still it was the hosts who would go closest to the first points of the second half. Welsby caused mayhem in the Salford defence before finding Sironen, whose offload found Lees charging towards the line. The recently capped England prop was held up short and could not resist stretching out an arm to promote the ball over the line. Kendall was wise to it and correctly whistled for a double movement. In so doing he denied Lees a try in consecutive games. The Saints prop had previously made 22 appearances without one prior to breaking his 2022 duck in the home win over Toulouse. 


Welsby was next to try his luck, kicking ahead midway inside the Salford half before seeing the ball narrowly beat his chase to the dead ball line. Perhaps Saints were losing a bit of patience in attack, evidenced further by the one genuine boil on the backside of Lomax’s otherwise exemplary performance. And a costly boil at that. Trying to put boot to ball on another attacking kick Lomax instead took a rather clumsy looking air shot which fell kindly for Salford to recover. 


Quickly, they shifted it left through King Vuniyayawa, Sneyd and Lafai to release Burgess down the left hand touchline. He had too much pace for anyone up in the Saints defensive line and when Bennison got across to cover there was Brierley on the inside to finish off a flowing move. He even had time to run around underneath the posts to make Sneyd’s conversion a formality. Suddenly that Lomax drop-goal was the only difference between the sides at 13-12,  


Five minutes after Brierley’s try the Salford faithful almost saw their side go in front. Vuniyayawa just delayed his pass to Sneyd too long which meant that the Fijian was unable to avoid running around the back of Deon Cross. Sneyd had moved the ball on to Taylor who strolled over but the try was chalked off by Kendall. Correctly, as it turns out under the current interpretations. Kendall has had far, far more criticism from fans than his performance deserves - particularly on social media. But then what else is new? The game’s gone, after all. And it if you ask the average, in-no-way-biased rugby league fan the principal reason for its departure from wherever it is supposed to be is Kendall. Or Child. Or Robert Hicks. Or Ben Thaler. Take your pick. 


Saints - champion side that they are - responded to this minor heart stop by marching down the other end of the field and scoring what was perhaps the game clincher. Lomax’s trusty, overworked boot found another probing effort into the Salford in-goal. This time it was not Batchelor but Bennison who steamed on to it despite having started his run several metres behind his veteran team-mate. The speed of Bennison’s chase must have caught out Sneyd and Lafai too. The pair appeared statuesque as the Saints stand-in fullback won the race to touch down with something to spare. It was his sixth try in his 17 appearances in the first team. And the most important by some considerable distance. Makinson was on target with the extras and with just 10 minutes to play there was breathing space again.


Saints could have sealed it had Hurrell and Makinson managed to be tuned into the same station when an opportunity arose. The Tongan centre found a bit of space out wide but his flicked pass out to Makinson on the wing only found touch.  An error count of 13 is not huge for a team which has made more handling mistakes than any other in 2022 but it was higher than even their own average of 11.33 per game. It also goes some way to explaining why Saints relied so much on the boot of Lomax to create opportunities. It just wasn’t a day on which things clicked in the back division even on the relatively few occasions that it chanced its arm. That has plenty to do with the constant shuffling of personnel from 1 to 7 but in the case of Hurrell and Makinson they have spent almost the entire season in tandem on Saints’ right. This wasn’t the highlight of what has been a pretty fruitful link-up.


Salford’s big ‘if only’ moment arrived late. Sneyd managed to get another searching kick to stand up near the sideline just a few metres from Saints try line. Bennison was forced to take the ball out over the touchline to give Salford a try scoring chance with six minutes on the clock. They nearly took it. If you were to ask anyone of a Salford persuasion they would no doubt argue that they did. Sneyd was behind it all once more as his kick rolled into the Saints in-goal area. As Lafai began to chase it Makinson took the cynical decision to stop him in his tracks, grabbing hold of the Salford centre and pulling him back. 


Kendall swiftly produced the yellow card for Makinson’s professional foul. Yet crucially, the referee chose not to award a penalty try nor even to hand it upstairs for further analysis. As much as this may not carry too much weight coming from a column dedicated to all things Saints I think he probably made the right call. The fact that fans and observers of all persuasions have been arguing about it since shows there is doubt about whether Lafai would have got to the ball. 


The yellow card is right because it denied Lafai an opportunity to score.  For a penalty try to be awarded the foul must deny a certainty in the opinion of the referee. Even if it had been handed upstairs and the video referee had felt differently than either Kendall or I, it seems unlikely that he would have considered that there was sufficient evidence to overturn. It’s a hard luck story for Salford and I get their frustration. And that of the rest of the league who are probably bored shitless with the concept of Saints in Grand Finals. But - as with the earlier call involving Sneyd on Batchelor - the right decision was probably made according to the laws. 


The argument that Makinson would not have made the foul had Lafai not been about to score holds no water. Or to go all Joe Lycett on the matter it doth butter no parsnips. Makinson made the foul to eliminate the possibility of Lafai getting to it. Not because he was certain that he would. He made a split second decision not to leave it to chance. And he got what is the current sanction for it in a yellow card.  No more to see.


Right or wrong it was an outcome which finally put Salford away. There was still time for Sio’s season to end in La La Land as he caught an accidental knee to the head from Lees. And for some more tiresome histrionics from Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook as he Smithies-ed all around the unfortunate Vuniyayawa when he was deemed to have made an error at the play-the-ball. It looked like less than legal pressure from the Saints prop from the two places I was sat. Inside the ground at the time and then again on my sofa the next day. The last desperate throw of the dice came when Sneyd’s crossfield kick deep inside his own territory found Burgess but his pass inside was knocked down by Lomax to end the game.


The best team won this game, despite Salford’s hard luck stories and some truly mind-numbing attack from Saints. Woolf’s side had far more possession and territory and were more dominant defensively than a seven-point winning margin suggests. With the added creativity of a Lewis Dodd they could have scored more points. But no doubt Salford fans will see our Lewis Dodd and raise us a Croft. Yet even he would have struggled to create during the first quarter of the game when the Red Devils could barely get out of their own 20m zone. 


The stats illustrate Saints’ superiority. No fewer than eight Saints made 100+ metres. Leading the way with 170 was Bennison. Hurrell was a constant threat so long as he avoided trying to pass as he added 147. You’d expect nothing more than Makinson to be on the list with 132. Coming in on the unfamiliar position of left wing and knocking out 126 metres represents a decent return to action for Percival after a four-month layoff.   In the forwards Sironen was the most impactful going forward with 136 metres followed by Paasi on 107, Knowles on 105 and Lees on 100. 


For all that they fell short in this one Salford can be hugely proud of their 2022 efforts, particularly in the second half of the season. I have my own views on the question of whether a team which loses eight of its first 11 games should ever end up one game from a Grand Final. Yet the improvement in Rowley’s side throughout the second half of the year has been awesome. Their performances have been dazzling, giving the entire game a much needed shot in the arm after a seemingly interminable period of grinding, arm-wrestling and the bloody processes. If Rowley can keep this team together and keep improving it they’ll be a threat in 2023. But can he? Other clubs will have noticed the quality they have in their ranks? That’s always been Salford’s problem. See 2019.


For Saints it’s that 14th Grand Final, and a fifth against Leeds Rhinos. You won’t need me to remind you that the trophy has gone to Headingley on the other four occasions. But the last of those was 11 years ago. Makinson, Lomax, Roby and McCarthy-Scarsbrook are the only current Saints bearing those scars.  Only Zak Hardaker featured for Leeds. 


The history means nothing this week. Does it?


Saints; Bennison, Makinson, Hurrell, Mata’utia, Percival, Welsby, Lomax, Paasi, Roby, Lees, Sironen, Batchelor, Knowles. Interchanges: McCarthy-Scarsbrook, Lussick, Bell, Wingfield


Salford Red Devils;


Brierley, Sio, Cross, Lafai, Burgess, Atkin, Sneyd, Vuniyayawa, Ackers, Ormondroyd, Wright, Watkins, Taylor. Interchanges: Dupree, Gerrard, Bourouh, Luckley


Referee: Chris Kendall





 







 


Super League Semi-Final Preview - Saints v Salford Red Devils

Anyone feeling nervous? 


I am.  In the words of that great philosopher Marshall Mathers my palms are sweaty, knees weak, arms are heavy. There’s vomit on my sweater already, mum’s spaghetti.


The cause of this sudden neurosis is of course the Super League semi-final between our threepeating, injury-ravaged Saints and the suddenly brilliant Salford Red Devils.  The two meet this Saturday afternoon (September 17, kick-off 1.00pm) for a place in the Old Trafford Grand Final a week later. 


There was a time when meeting Salford in a major semi-final would be cause for much joviality.  Victory would be a formality and the chat would mostly be about how you were getting to the final and where you were going for a pint before kick-off.  Not so much this year.  After a late run which saw them win eight out of their final nine Super League regular season games Paul Rowley’s team are suddenly a very different proposition.  Awkwardly, one of those wins was a 44-12 flogging of Kristian Woolf’s side on July 31. And these are wins that have been achieved in a style that can be classed as flambouyant amid the current dominance of conservative, go-through-the-processes rugby league.


Saints had key players missing that day in July but the thing is, they will again this weekend.  The talk of the town in the week leading up to today’s squad announcement (September 15) has been all about who won’t be among Woolf’s 21-man party rather than who will.  


Alex Walmsley was ruled out a couple of days ago with a foot injury which has prevented him from playing since the 30-10 defeat at Wigan on August 26.  That was a pretty savage setback.  Talk among the fans of how Agnatius Paasi or even Matty Lees have out-performed Walmsley this year is evidence of how the ex-Batley man is a victim of his own success. Though he may not be at the level he has been over the last two seasons Walmsley is still our best front rower by some distance.


Yet I felt even greater concern about the fitness or otherwise of Will Hopoate. The rarely seen fullback has only played 11 times in his debut season with Saints.  When he has played he has been crucial.  He slots in at fullback which allows Jack Welsby to move into the halves to fill the Lewis Dodd-sized hole alongside Jonny Lomax that has been there ever since Dodd suffered a season ending Achilles injury in the home win over Wigan on Good Friday.  That was April 15. 


Cutting to the chase, Hopoate has not made it.  While this is about as surprising as the fact that my knees are weak it is also a serious problem.  What does Woolf do?  Does he leave Welsby in the fullback role that he was supposed to occupy after Lachlan Coote left for Hull KR and before Dodd suffered his injury?  If he does then who plays in the halves with Lomax? Woolf has tried Ben Davies on five previous occasions to varying degrees of lead balloonery.  


The coach has also tried moving James Roby there from the hooking role.  The captain may still be one of the best players in Super League or even the world of rugby league but the uncomfortable truth is that he ain’t no halfback.  He hasn’t really been a halfback since around 2005. 


All of which means it will probably fall on Welsby to play there again.  Fullback duties could be handed on to Jon Bennison as he continues his impressive breakout year.  The 19 year-old has made 16 appearances in 2022, far more than perhaps even he would have expected at the start of the year.  Back then the likes of Walmsley and Dodd were available and nobody could foresee the unreliability of Hopoate or the absolute ruin of a season that was about to be endured by Regan Grace. 


Yet even the deployment of Bennison as the last line of defence won’t solve all of our issues.  Who is going to play on the left wing with Grace now concentrating on getting fit enough to embark on his rugby union career in France?  The most commonly suggested solution appears to be to switch the returning Mark Percival out wider to the wing from his favoured left centre position.  Wherever you play Percival it should be remembered that he has not featured in the first team since the 12-10 win at Super League’s touring comedy act Warrington Wolves in the middle of May.  


Bringing the England international centre straight into a semi-final represents a sizeable risk but with the lack of pace in the backs that has been so sorely evident in recent weeks I don’t really see what alternative Woolf has.  If Percival is fit he has to play - even if it is just to plant the seed of the threat of pace in Salford minds.  That said, maybe his body has more chance of holding up on the wing than it would in the centres.  Yet even that depends on how often he is used as a battering ram to get Saints out of their own end.  That is, after all, one of the core principles of Woolfball. It is still a surprise to me that Tommy Makinson’s face doesn’t look more like Paul Sculthorpe’s.


Should Percival be used as a winger – a role he actually occupied in his last two appearances before getting injured – then the smart money is on another returnee – Sione Mata’utia – to fill the centre berth ahead of Davies.  Mata’utia is a second row forward, a fact which is abundantly clear whenever he fills in at centre.  Yet don’t expect that to be a barrier to his selection in the position.  Woolf just does not have a winger available in this 21 other than Makinson. And as the more shrewd among you will have spotted, you need two in your starting 13. 


Josh Simm is not in the squad, nor is Ben Lane who played in the last two regular season games – a defeat to Wakefield alongside several of his fellow academy class – and a win over Toulouse in which the youngster was accompanied by a lot more experience and quality.  Bennison can play on the wing but as we have already established, he will probably have to play fullback.  It is difficult, isn’t it? Imagine how Woolf feels ahead of his final home game as Saints boss. Picking a right edge combination is not so troublesome with Makinson joined by his regular partner on that side Konrad Hurrell.


Despite the loss of Walmsley things look a little more straightforward in the pack.  Paasi should step up from his regular bench spot to start alongside Lees, with Roby at hooker.  If Mata’utia moves to the centres then expect Curtis Sironen and Joe Batchelor to form the second row pairing with Morgan Knowles at loose forward. 


Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook has another one-year deal in his back pocket.  It is possibly the most undeserved one-year stretch since Deirdrie Rachid was sent to prison in 1998.  Yet the former London Bronco remains welded to the bench along with ex-Salford Red Devils Grand Finalist Joey Lussick.  There are a clutch of candidates to join them.  Standing out among them James Bell has featured in the last eight games while Jake Wingfield has been involved in the last 12.  


That surely makes them more likely to get the nod from Woolf than either Taylor Pemberton or Sam Royle.  Davies’ involvement would appear to rest on whether Woolf would prefer to use him – a natural centre – ahead of Mata’utia in the three-quarters and switch the former Newcastle Knight back into the forwards.   


Our visitors arrive in palm-sweating, knee-weakening, vom-inducing form.  Following that run of eight wins out of nine during the regular season run-in Paul Rowley’s side dismissed Huddersfield Giants 28-0 in their own back yard in their playoff opener last week.  Former Red Devils coach Ian Watson and his troops had no answers to the flair on offer from the likes of Brodie Croft, Tim Lafai, Deon Cross and Kallum Watkins.  With Marc Sneyd pulling the strings in the kicking game and Andy Ackers an eye-catching presence at hooker Rowley’s men had all the tools they need to trouble any Super League side. 


And then Croft got injured.  


The former Melbourne Storm and Brisbane Broncos man left the action at the John Smith’s Stadium just before half-time having briefly lost consciousness.  Concussion protocols now dictate that a player who has been knocked out or failed an HIA must sit out of action for a period of 11 days.  So this game comes around just too quickly for Croft whose Steve Prescott Man Of Steel nominee form has been a huge driver in Salford’s own upturn in fortunes during the second half of the season. He is a breathtakingly good player who would walk into any Super League side.

 

Yet he is not the only reason for Salford’s rapid rise into major contention.  Structurally I don’t expect too much to change.  Chris Atkin is likely to come in for Croft and although he isn’t on the level of his inspirational team-mate he is a more than capable player.  When Sneyd was out during Salford’s last visit to Saints in April Atkin formed a formidable partnership with Croft.  The former Hull KR man could have won it at the end but was denied his moment of glory by a scarcely believable but quite heroic last ditch tackle by Knowles on the North Stand touchline.  You get the feeling Saints will need that kind of commitment to get through this one.


Rowley will be without Greg Burke and James Greenwood, while there is no Danny Addy either.  Ex-Wigan trio Jack Wells, Dan Sarginson and Morgan Escare all miss out too as well as former Saint Matty Costello.  But in Ryan Brierley, Sio, Cross, Lafai, Burgess, Atkin and Sneyd there is still plenty for Saints to think about in the back division.  


Up front Ackers is a leader by example with no small amount of skill.  His try against the Giants in which he dummied the last defender out of West Yorkshire was an example of everything that is good about Salford. They can mix it too, with Jack Ormondroyd in the form of his life at prop.  He has bobbed around the Championship since his 2018 release by Leeds Rhinos but this year has made 23 appearances in Super League for the Red Devils, scoring five tries.  Former NRL pair Elijah Taylor and Shane Wright can be found in the back row giving the side both skill and solidity.

 

Now you may have seen or heard it mentioned this week that Salford have not won in the town of St Helens since 1980.  That’s 42 years ago.  That was the year when the Empire Struck Back, Dolly Parton, Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda mistakenly believed they had poisoned boss Dabney Coleman and Kramer took on er…Kramer in the courtroom.  On January 12 that year Salford won 18-17 at Knowsley Road with Clive Griffiths, Roy Matthias and Eric Chisnall crossing for Saints’ three-point tries.  Griffiths kicked four goals and Roy Haggerty was on the bench.  It has been a long time since the Saints match day squad contained two men in it called Roy. That is just how long it is since Salford won in St Helens.


Since then Saints have dominated at home against Salford. That Knowles-preserved 14-10 win in April was just the latest in a long line of successes.  It has sometimes been ugly for the visitors.  The first match with fans in attendance post-Covid ended 28-0 in Saints’ favour in May 2021.  Going back to May 2001 Saints scored 11 tries and Sean Long kicked 11 goals - the most he managed in a single game in his stellar 331-game, 2625-point Saints career - as Saints demolished Salford 66-16. In 2018 I witnessed a 34-2 home success from the South West side of the ground after the lift in the North Stand simply refused to operate.  Even machinery couldn’t summon up enthusiasm for a visit from Salford at times during the last four decades. This current Salford crop is a special exception.

 

Semi-finals between the two have sometimes been close. Not particularly the 1997 Challenge Cup semi-final which Saints won 50-20 at Wigan’s old Central Park ground. More the 1977 Floodlit Trophy clash which Saints won 7-4, or the Lancashire Cup last four tie in 1932 which ended 2-2 before Saints won the replay 17-10. The teams have only ever met in one major final, that being Saints’ 23-6 victory in 2019 which started the current run of three Super League titles in a row. 


Will it be four? Or will Salford deny the champions the opportunity to contest a fourth successive Grand Final? It could have been five if Ben Barba hadn’t made a business decision to stop tackling at the end of his highlight-stacked 2018 campaign. It could have been six if Ryan Morgan hadn’t given a daft penalty away in the dying moments at Castleford in 2017. It could have been seven if…no. I can’t make a case for winning the 2016 title. We had Jack Owens on the wing, Dominique Peyroux at centre and Jordan Turner at 6. Greg Richards was a starting prop. Atelea Vea lurked ominously on the bench, and sometimes even started. 


Regardless of injuries this Saints team still has the quality to make it through. They can worry about how to win at Old Trafford if and when they get there. In knockout football you only get one shot.


They must not miss their chance to blow.


Squads;


Saints: 


1. Jack Welsby, 2. Tommy Makinson, 4. Mark Percival, 6. Jonny Lomax, 9. James Roby, 10. Matty Lees, 11. Sione Mata’utia, 12. Joe Batchelor, 13. Morgan Knowles, 14. Joey Lussick, 15. LMS, 16. Curtis Sironen, 17. Agnatius Paasi, 19. Jake Wingfield, 20. James Bell, 22. Ben Davies, 23. Konrad Hurrell, 26. Sam Royle, 27. Jon Bennison, 31. Taylor Pemberton.


Salford Red Devils; 


1. Ryan Brierley 2. Ken Sio 3. Kallum Watkins 4. Tim Lafai 5. Joe Burgess 7. Marc Sneyd 8. Sitaleki Akauola 9. Andy Ackers 11. Shane Wright 13. Elijah Taylor 15. King Vuniyayawa 16. Ryan Lannon 17. Harvey Livett 18. Chris Atkin 19. Jack Ormondroyd 22. Rhys Williams 26. Sam Luckley 27. Amir Bourough 28. Deon Cross 29. Alex Gerrard 32. Tyler Dupree


Referee: Chris Kendall


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